AFTER Keat's sonnet yesterday, another perspective of the margin of sea and land, this time from Fraserburgh-born George Bruce.

The lines are included in Today Tomorrow, his Collected Poems, 1933-2000 (Polygon, £14.99).

KINNAIRD HEAD

I go North to cold, to home, to Kinnaird,

Fit monument for our time.

This is the outermost edge of Buchan

Inland the sea birds range,

The tree's leaf has salt upon it,

The tree turns to the low stone wall.

And here a promontory rises towards Norway.

Irregular to the top of thin grey grass

Where the spindrift in storm lays its beads.

The water plugs in the cliff sides,

The gull cries from the clouds

This is the consummation of the plain.

O impregnable and very ancient rock,

Rejecting the violence of water,

Ignoring it accumulations and strategy,

You yield to history nothing.